The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, June 19, 1931, Image 4

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    ‘THE DALLAS POST, DALLAS, PA., FRIDAY, JUNE 19,1031
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| PUD, YOU HAVE Ue LoT OF
’ i» HOUSE, AT HOME 4
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[FARM — 8uT WE'VE GOT
ANIMALS RIGHT IN OUR. _
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SAILS
TO CLIMB
(POSED To |C GALES
ROM ES. MENFEL, Sroasse Ali dy
‘tonville.
EE Mr.
‘| daughter,
Wolfe. -
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4 or
~ Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Shupp were re-
“{cent visitors at Benton and Washing-
and Mrs. Henry “Wolfe “and
‘spent Bynasy with Mr. and Mrs. E. N.
| “Mrs. M. Donald Williams and daug- Kingston, were recent callers at this | Mr. and Mrs.
‘| ter, Jeanne, and Mrs. Harold B. Wag- | place.
ner. and son, Keith, are -spending some |
Sime With their Sister, Mrs, J. Rutter | Maple Grove drum’ corps and several | Moyer and son, Hilpert, of Lghinsnt
- © We Mix Ideas sind
ith Our Printing Inks
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benefit of our experience.
T
Ohl, at Bloomsburg. “lof their tHiends were pleasantly enter-
‘Miss Lillian ‘Moore, of Kingston, tained at the home ‘of Mr, and Mrs. W.
spent the week-end at this place as| IH. Shupp in honor of - Mrs. Sarah
the guest of Miss Arlene Mott. Shupp, who is a G. A. R. widow. Sev-
Miss Emily Addison and George Ad eral selections were given by the drum
dison, of Wilkes-Barre; Mr. and Mrs. corps after which a dainty lunch was
J. E. La Barr and son, Harold, of served. Among those present were:
] Claude Halloway, of |.
West Nanticoke; Mr. and Mrs. A. M.
On Saturday evening, June 13, the ‘Wilkinson, of Town Line; Ralph
Genevieve, of Loyalville,
»
~
NG ™ o!
Claude Sorber, Eugene F. May, John
Sorber, Boyd Scott, Hiram Sorber, of
Noxen R. D.; J. M. Rood, of Dallas;
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Hehrig, of Dallas;
Hunlock; Mrs. M. D. Williams and
baby, of Manchester, N. Y.; Otis A.
Rood, Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Wolfe, Mr.
apd Mrs. D. W. Davenport, Mr. and
Mrs. W: H. Shupp and Mrs. Sarah
Shupp.
Mr. and Mrs. Lory Reese, of Kings-
ton, were callers at C. H. Wolfe's gast
Saturday.
Rev. and Mrs. C. B. Henry have re-
turned from a trip to Toronto, Canada,
where they attended the World's Con-
vention of W. C. T. U. They also spent
several days with relativs in New York.
———eee——0
? ~Alderson-
Adda Garinger, Correspondent
Miss Mildred Kitchen was the guest
of Lois Avery on Sunday.
Edgar Stern, Jr., a student at Lehigh
University, is spending the summer
with his parents here. ;
Members of the Epworth League
gave a surprise party on Tuesday eve-
ning honoring Adda Garinger, who
won first place in a gontest which that
organization held. Games and music
by the Epworth League quintet were
the diversions of the evening. An Ep-
worth League pin which had been
worn by an older member for thirty-
two years was presented to Miss Gar-
inger. Lunch’ was served to Adda Gar-
inger, Genevieve and Lillian York, Vir-
ginia Allen, Ruth Jackson, Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Garinger, Ruth and Es-
ther Honeywell, Mrs. Howard Higgins,
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Rogers and son,
Bernard, "Mrs. Sterling Kitchen, Miss |
Emma Adenkirchen, Frank Jackson,
Mike and Pete Kuchta, Joe Rauch,
Harry Allen, Jr., George Smith, Ralph
Harris, Ross Garinger, Mr. and Mrs.
W. R. Garinger, Esther and Elsie Gar- |
inger. Ravmond ‘Garinger and Mrs.|
Howard Higgins were second and
third winners in the contest.
Mr. andy Mrs. Homer Meeker and
family, of Plymouth, spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Edward Conden.
Miss Pauline Billings, of New Al-
bany, is spending several days with
Esther and Adda Garinger.
-Kunkle-
Adda Gariner, Correspondent
Miss Eloise Nulton, of Kingston,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Nul-
ton, of this place, and Stephen Moss,
of Loyalville, were married on Wed-
nesdav of last week. They will make
their home in Loyalville.
Miss Gertrude Smith and Mrs. Fred
Kunkle accompanied Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Harold Wagner and son, Keith, of
Herbert Bronson, of Ruggles, to’ the
quarterly ‘meeting of Pomona Grange
No. 44 held at Pond [Hill Grange on
Saturday. |
Miss Margaret Kunkle spent the
week-end with her aunt, Mrs. Etta
Kocher, of “Wyoming. e
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Corby and
daughters, Dorothy and Janet, of West
Pittston, visited Mr. and Mrs. C. W.
Kunkle and familly Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sweezy and
daughter, Phyllis, spent Sunday after-
noon with Mr, and Mrs. H. W. Herd-
man.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Shoemaker 2ove
evening to a group of friends the oc-
casion being the birthday anniversary
of Mrs. Shoemaker's and her daughter,
Miss Emily Shoemaker, Covers were
laid for Mr. and Mrs. Charles Herd-
man, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Rydd, Alvin
Meeker, Mr.
maker and Miss Emily Shoemaker.
Mr. and Mrs, Elmer Logo and fam-
ily, of Wilkes-Barre; Mrs. Williams, of
Luzerne; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rydd,
of Wyoming;
Wardan, Misses Elizabeth and Kay
Wardan and ‘Sherman Kunkle were
callers at the Charles Herdman home
Sunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. William Shoemaker
and son, Bobbie, and Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Long, of Trucksville, called om
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Shoemaker om
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Shoemaker en-
tertained on Sunday Mr. and Mrs.
James Landon, of Kingston, and Mr.
and Mrs. George Landon, Misses Lois
and ‘Althea Landon and Thomas Lan-
don. g if \
Miss Mildred Devens, Thomas Lan-
don, Edwin Shoemaker and Clyde
| Hoyt, members of the first graduating
lclass of Dallas township
jan school are enjoying a ‘trip to
WV: ashington this week with the class.
Miss Helen Spencer, of W est Dallas, is
al=o a member of the class.
The Kunkle family reunion will be
{held tomorrow (Saturday) at Kunkle
Community Hall. Relatives and friends
| cordially invited.
| --Mrs. Clarence Roote and sons, Clar-
lence and Freddie, visited Mr. and Mrs.
Emery Straley, of Plattsburg, on Wed-
nesday of last week. :
RRR RNR EIARNRRNN
. CLASSIFIED ADS
AT LITTLE
COST
IN THE
DALLAS POST
ARE ALWAYS SURE
OF BEST RESULTS
YOUR DOG AN INTRICATE MECHANISM
CHAPPEL KENNEL FQUNDATION
HFART~ no man-made
“FORE ARM Tt Tone
before steam shovel days
A LEGS ~ move
if back and forth
J) instead of around
That dog
cated machine he is?
wonderful inventions
man in his
the
by
rise
worked out in living beings
rather pale by the c« iso
states the Chappel Kennel Found
of yours—out there
watching over the baby or playing
ball with the youngsters—do you
realize what a marvelously compli-
We are all inclined to marvel at
evolved
i from savag
ery, yet when these are placed side
by side with nature's inventions as
they
probably the one invention In
which man has surpassed nature,
for the dog's legs are nothing but
two spokes of a wheel, moving
back and forth instead of around
as they carry him forward.
The dog as we know him today
is the result of centuries of envir-
onmental influences, states the
Foundation. He is changing before
our very eyes, adopting such char-
acteristics as will enable him fo
adjust himself to civilized living
and dropping those that hamper
o-
n,
a
a delightful supper party on Saturday.
and Mrs. Henry $Shoe-
Mr. and Mrs. Sherman
vocational *
AEX EEEXLEREXX EERE XRKRRKRSR:
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A {ou
tion, Rockford, Illinois. The dog's
skeleton is many times more intri-
cate than the steel frame-work of,
say, the 86-story Empire State
building in New York City. His
muscles, supplying the motive pow-
er for his body, are infinitely su-
perior to the man-made Ss en-
gine. - His heart, first devised by
creatures in the sea countless ages
ago, is a far more ingenious pump
than man has yet been able to
perfect. His brain responds to
your commands by means of a
much more complicated system
oe I than a central telephone exchange.
No steam shovel of our civilization
operates quite as effectively as the
dog’s ‘‘forearm.” The wheel is
him from fitting into the present-
day world.
Kindness kills most dogs. Out of
a good heart folks feed their dogs
too much or feed them the wrong
kind of food. The chief element of
a dog’s diet must be meat. If you
feed your dog a prepared we 1l-bal-
anced kennel ration with dog bis-
cuits added twice a week for va-
riety’s sake, he will need nothing
else except water. Be sure the
wording “U.S. - Inspected- and
Passed by Department of Agricul-
ture” appears on the can label; it
is your protection that what has
gone into that can is as fresh and =
pure and clean as anything intend~
ed for your own use.